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Sunday, 12 August 2012

Flabäck duathlon

What a wonderful, sunny day we got
yesterday. It was the perfect day for me to test my boundaries. No,
not those boundaries, the ones I keep testing by running
further and further. No; these were mental boundaries.

A couple of friends live in this little
community outside Gothenburg called Flabäck. Every year, a few
people from this area gather there to participate in FIT, or Flabäck
International Triathlon as they call it, probably with a good dose of
winking while they say that name. There is a junior class and a
duathlon class, too. There is no official timekeeping, no starting
gun, no judges if you cut corners while you're swimming. Just a bunch
of neighbours ”competing” against each other.

My friends invited me to this event,
and since I neither could transport my bike there nor cycle the 22 km
that the triathlon would entail without my knee cutting itself off
from the rest of my leg and fleeing to Australia, I went for the
duathlon. 250 meters swimming, 2,5 km running. The first part would
be a test of my mental boundaries, the second a test for my knee.

The jetty we'd have to swim to in the distance

We floated in the water. My friend J
said we could swim together, and I was thankful. I'm not a great fan
of swimming in lakes. Correction: I'm not a big fan of swimming
across lakes. Their water is usually murky once you leave the
beach and you can't see what's underneath, if there are rocks you
could cut yourself on for instance. Also, you don't see the piranhas
coming. There were some teenagers in front of us, and another lady to
the side, so the duathlon participant total was a staggering 7-8
people. The teenagers kicked our butt big time. The lady, too. By the
time we had swum to the jetty across the lake and back, the teenagers
were nowhere to be seen.

Oh well. I had survived the swimming
part. I wondered why swimming always seemed to leave me
breathless while running didn't. Both J and I had swum in our VFF, so
we could just get out of the water and move seamlessly to the running
part of the duathlon. Our support team, ie J's fiancée S, handed me
my Garmin and we were off. We soon hit a patch of stone-littered
single track which forced us to keep a lower pace. The conversation
flowed freely and I was having a great time. I wasn't even thinking
about my knee. It wasn't saying much, anyway.

The finish line for the junior triathlon. I think.

After a total of almost 24 minutes,
14.30 of which were running, we were at the lake beach slash finish
line, where we got some applauds from S and the kids (and from a lady
who was just there to sunbathe). I went into the lake again to cool
down, and it felt wonderful. The weather, the company, this little
neighbourhood event, it beat any Göteborgsvarvet for me. And the knee didn't seem to mind that it had run so far without walking breaks. And the day
was not over yet.

J's focaccia. The best focaccia I've ever tasted.

While I was warming up in the sun on my
friends' patio 10 minutes later, they were busy preparing dinner. We
grilled, we ate, we chatted the hours away, until it was time to join
some of the other neighbours for the Flängbäck festival. On a wet
football field that hadn't been mowed in weeks, 50-odd people had
brought foldable chairs and beer and their good mood, and sang along
to Swedish summer classics that a band consisting of one guitarist,
one singer and an Ipod enthusiastically and lovingly half-improvised
on. Well, some of the public did not so much sing as shouted at the
top of their lungs, but the intention was good, I'm sure. It was far
from perfect; yet in a way it was just that.

Yep, there was dancing too

As the evening drew to its close, my
friends made some hot coffee to go with the sinfully good rhubarb pie
that S had baked. The sun had gone down and it was chilly. We said
our goodbyes with promises to meet when J and I are in Gothenburg
again. Perhaps for next year's Flabäck duathlon.